loop_disconnect

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Mastodon n00b & Sydney gen-X'er working at Aussie cyber startup. Tragically addicted collector / historian of vintage cipher and espionage gear. Buyer of way too many books, pinot drinker, solo camper and admirer of skies full of stars.
@boblord Just sent you connection request on LinkedIn, will post some updates on how the collection is coming along.
@crikeycon - Hi, I’ll look forward to coming along, might even submit a CFP if you’d fancy some vintage espionage gear there. in checking out your website though I can’t figure out where you’ve hidden sponsorship info. Is there a page you can direct me to?

One thing that’s interesting on joining the cyber industry is that since it deals in the invisible and ephemeral, we don’t have a lot of physical artefacts to explain our mission and heritage.

To understand and help make our threat actor opponents “more real” it’s interesting to look at who they were, how were they recruited and trained, what animates them? Here’s a small selection of items from the Stasi that speak to aspects of this.

Stasi chief Erich Mielke killed a Police sergeant in 1931 but went on to be chief of intel for over thirty years to 1989. The cheesy wooden stein is from his office.

His head of foreign intelligence Markus Wolf “the man with no face” was rarely pictured but apparently had a sense of humour.
These beer mats were designed by him and feature cats in “hear no evil” poses or releasing bugs (get it?) from a box.

The badges are from KGB and Stasi technical colleges, and the EhrenTeller (honorary award plate) is from a 1973 graduate of the Stasi’s Juristiche Hochschule (legal college) at Potsdam.

There they learned a version of law that told them shooting escapees at the border was OK, and you could secretly try and jail people.

A highly technically sophisticated but ruthlessly authoritarian regime is a warning from history. And as cyber people, we should also be mindful that much of the tech we create and administer is “dual use” capable for state surveillance.

#cybersecurity #espionage #coldwar #spycraft #vintageespionage

It’s nearly 34 years since the Berlin Wall came down and I remember it like it was recent history. In June I was in Berlin visiting the wall, former Stasi sites, and finding more items for the Cold War / Cyber Espionage museum.

On the other side of the world in Sydney Australia that collection is taking shape.

Here’s some items including:
- a huge surveillance camera off the wall, a searchlight and a siren
- border / warning signs incl from Gleinicke (bridge of spies)
- hand carved wood Stasi EhrenTeller (honorary award plate)
- uniform and personal effects of the head warden from the Stasi women’s prison at Hoheneck

#cybersecurity #coldwar #espionage #spycraft #vintageespionage

The human foolishly created holes on the gear shelves by moving stuff and that real estate is now mine! cos I am a cyber cat!

#catsofinfosec

@boblord Hi Bob I saw your comment on CryptoCollectors and have pinged you on LinkedIn. Today I post more there as I don’t have a website yet, most of time I’m taking gear out to show at cyber events - an audience I know from my day job. Cheers Mike

It was suggested to me I might be coming across as too much of a commie lover as I share so much KGB and Stasi kit.

Well (ahem) I just find opposition research rather fascinating - but your point is taken - so for balance here’s some Western spook radios.

Top right a classic WWII suitcase radio the British Mark III, bottom right a Mark 328 from about 1970 then a Mark 301 from the early 1950’s. GCCS (now GCHQ) had a big hand in designing earlier UK secret service radios.

Bottom left from West Germany the SP-15 from the 1950’s, a very successful radio, it was replaced by (bottom centre in green) the SP-20, then that in turn by models used across NATO.

Top left a 1940’s CIA RS-1 or GRC-109 these were superseded by the RS-6 a very nice cosmetic example here, and top centre we have the CIA RS-224, all these in beautiful CIA “dark side matt black”.

Enjoy

#cybersecurity #coldwar #espionage #spycraft #vintageespionage

I’ve been invited to show some spook toys at a cyber OSINT event and realised I can make packing easier by showing mainly tiny spook items. So here for your enjoyment are some analog-era badness in small form-factor.

There’s a Stasi wall bug, microdot/mikrats and special mikrat lens, hollow dice, small 1980’s CIA camera, a hollow coin and a coin with concealed blade, mini telescope, cyanide ampoule container, and a pigeon message carrier tube.

#cybersecurity #coldwar #espionage #spycraft #vintageespionage

@hacks4pancakes You have me thinking now about how Microsoft owns LinkedIn …
@jerry A whole new reason to give the humble umlaut a new lease on life